Categories Corporate
Professional eBook

Easy-to-use Team Facilitation Techniques

Help your Team Improve Today

41
Language:  English
The ideal companion for anyone who seeks to help their team improve via effective facilitation, including step-by-step instructions for each of the techniques that are included.
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Description
Content

Books about Business Agility, Product Management, Kanban, Lean, and similar topics generally cover theory, values, and principles in some detail, and understandably so. What’s often missing from such books: simple, clear, practical instructions that can help teams achieve desired outcomes. This book leverages the practical experiences of the author, making available no-nonsense, simple advice that can help any team improve.

About the Author

Philip Rogers works with individuals and teams to apply techniques that enable effective collaboration, surface and address challenges, and deliver results. Phil’s career spans more than 30 years, starting with seven years of service as a US Air Force Officer. Phil has worked with many organizations that are leaders in their respective fields, such as Cisco Systems, Intel Corporation, National Public Radio, and Fidelity Investments, and also is a volunteer counselor with Crisis Text Line and a volunteer paleontologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.

  • About the author
  • Preface
  1. Foundational Considerations When Working with Teams
    1. Psychological Safety
    2. Shared Understanding
    3. Getting Things Done
    4. Continuous Improvement
  2. Getting Started with Kanban
    1. When Is Kanban a Good Fit?
    2. Kanban Principles
    3. What Kanban is Not
    4. Kanban and Flow
    5. Exercises to Understand the Type and Flow of Work
    6. General Practices of Kanban
    7. Conclusion
  3. Getting Started with Scrum
    1. When Is Scrum a Good Fit?
    2. The Three Pillars of Scrum
    3. What Scrum is Not
    4. The Scrum Team
    5. Artifacts
    6. Events
    7. Facilitating the Scrum Events
  4. Conclusion
  • Endnotes
About the Author

Philip Rogers